I do not quite understand why it would be beneficial to restrict this question to a specific pair.
Richard Pavlicek published results from top level tournament play at
http://www.rpbridge.net/rpme.htm where one room opened with 4M and the other with 1M
This could be extended to other preemptive scenarios.
Of course this does not answer all questions, but I doubt that any study will ever be conclusive.
For example you do not know from these results what happens when a preempt is obvious, but one pair is better placed, because its preemptive tendencies are more conservative.
Undoubtedly, just like opening bids restrictions on preempts have loosened over the years.
What puzzles me is that there is a corresponding trend to shy away to take the money.
This remarkable reluctance can only reinforce the trend to preempt on thin air.
The success of the Kranyak team in the trials to the Bermuda Bowl in Bali was in part due to the fact that they did not have this reluctance to play for penalty.
What do you bid?
This time it was Kranyak, who preempted and Wolpert, who raised the preempt.
A reigning world champion bid 4
♥ and played it there.
In the other room with no preempt 6
♦ was bid and made
A simple PASS and an easy defence would have netted six undertricks and 1400.
Well, if even a world champion can not take the money when the contract is six down, I am not surprised that preempts get weaker by the day.
Rainer Herrmann